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Don't panic! - Sally's guide to taking your MP out for the day 25 January 2012 We have just received another posting from Sally, full of wisdom and insight. If you haven't yet read her November offering you really ought to read that first. As we said then, "all is not as it seems". The clue is in the numbered paragraph 5 below. More than that we are not saying. W4MP Ed.
Don't panic! - Sally's guide to taking your MP out for the day
Sally’s 5-step guide to succesfully taking
your Member of Parliament out to meet ‘the public’
That last one’s really important.
January 9th, 4:15pm, West Twittering
Winterval Market
“HO HO HO!
Merry Winterval! And what
would you like young boy? Have
you been good this year?”
“You’re not Santa. You’re the MP. My mam
told me. And anyway, Christmas was two weeks ago...”
“The MP? That Appleby fellow?
I can assure you I am not!
HO HO HO! I am Father
Winterval!
You can almost see what the council was
going for when they came up with their Winterval festival.
Everyone knows stuff’s’ cheaper in the January sales - so surely all
those Christmas decorations and grottos are too?
It’s not like Morrisons need theirs until August anyway.
Though I’m not sure it was a good idea to get that Alan Rickman
impersonator to launch the whole thing by telling a school full of children
that Christmas was cancelled.
“Yeah you’re him, the MP. You’ve got a
fake beard. My mam said you’re generally alright and a real gentleman, not
like the rest, but that this year you’ve been a very naughty boy and
I should come and see what I can get because you’ll probably bung an iPad on
expenses for me like you did last year.”
“He did what? The cheeky litt... OH I
MEAN... HO HO HO - HARK AT THE CHILD!
Now take this lego set and bugger off kid...”
I’m not sure ‘Father Winterval’ was the
smartest idea anyone ever had. Austerity is one thing, but this is
just barmy. It’s almost
like they had a competition to come up with the stupidest thing possible to
bait the local MPs into publicising.
Still. my dad’s doing a good job.
He’s got the voice almost right - plummy, gin soaked and
deeply cynical, jollity enforced for just as long as it takes to get his
picture taken with a few cute children.
Nobody would look twice if he stood up at Prime Minister’s Questions
next Wednesday to sycophantically praise the important role the government’s
ferret cull has played in supporting rural communities, and most
importantly, people who like killing ferrets.
“HO HO HO.
Merry Winterval little girl!
Have you been a good this year?”
“...“
The child looks at my father pretending to be the MP
pretending to be an Austerity Britain version of Father Christmas, with a
mixture of fear and utter bewilderment, her brain unable to comprehend the
terrifying world she has been thrust into.
Then she wees herself.
You and me both kid.
Dad looks like a haunted man - he’s currently being
lectured by an 11 year old in deck shoes and a blazer on why he should vote
for a referendum on Britain’s membership of the European Union - and I
decide he’s done his job and it’s time to get him out.
I slowly edge towards the local party
organiser, Geoff (dressed somewhat inexplicably as one of Santa’s elves)
with a view to creating a distraction and extracting my dad from what’s now
turned into an extended essay on the failings of the Lisbon Treaty, and the
benefits an independent Britain would accrue from membership of NAFTA and
closer trading ties with ‘the colonies’.
‘Geoff, I think we need to get him out of
here, he’s gone sort of waxy and his right leg won’t stop shaking.
Just do what you can to distract people and I’ll get him out.’
Afterwards, when the police had taken Geoff away, I
thought about those words and how carefully I’d chosen them.
Not carefully enough it seems. But then I didn’t realise he’d bought
his bloody halbard with him.
Not to worry, the police reassured my dad that it was
all just for his own safety (parents can get a bit tetchy when you threaten
to chop their kids up, even in jest), and that ‘it’ll all be sorted out
Mr Appleby Sir, don’t you worry’.
My dad’s promised to get them all honours if they make it all go
away.
Anyway.
The local paper got their photo long before Geoff attempted to reenact the
Battle of Worcester (that toddler did look a lot like Oliver Cromwell now
that I think about it), so the world still thinks Rt Hon Gerrard Appleby is
out and about, working hard for the good people of West Twittering and
Chode.
What a start to 2012...
Sally - January 2012
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